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Show THE D ATLlf TRIBUITJ:: FRIDAY. OCTOBER t. 1SL 18, ..srros C. GOODWiy msts pi yBciurrxojn ; ...........I'lS.CO rT?r, f"nevtar..j... fl.OO pix month ?.uo l.fl:"f , three months. ...... ........ f uci.ay Tribcne, ens fWur.day Tribnn, ix months.............. 8.00 eekly Tribune, one year...; .... ........ V eklV Tribune, ix month.. ........... 1 year.-......."- . kly Tribune, three months Ali cotnmnnlcatioiisj relaunz w,bw or iouU be addresei to "Eorroa AVtt ? 5 . Tri-aryx- ." ' , - AllreEtttane and hasifess letter fhould be addressed to Tub TJubtxe Pubuisbixo Cox- . alt Lake City. JUah. . THE TKIBVSE PUBLISHING CO. IT- - Hanxan-v ' Manager. aT k SXCS HuITESa? wJlY I .J ; f "We an entire copy TO USS SIX.VE3. f v ;, with the " editorial, v above heading, from the Chicago Trlb-un- r, ' ', as follows: Follow'ins Is Senator Sherman's latest " definition of hi position on the silver quesI : . , tion: j . j ' Tbe inflationists demand an unlimited amount cf Treasury note without any basis at alt, or basd upon silver a more than its inaiket value. and the other party a$soppo6ed to or reluctantly ftoquiesce in the tissue! ot Treasury notes based spun silver bullion alt its gold value. I beiiere : that the present .volume of United States note i ought to sbe supplemented by Treasury notes limited is amount to the production of the pre-- i cious metals in the United States at gold value deposited in thef Treasury, represented la circulation bv? an amount of paper money. This is the middle equal safe ground between undue atji contraction and undue expansion. It will be peen jt that Senator Sherman wants do more silver coined, to 'be used la tbe redemption of silver eertifi-'- -' ; : : ; 1 , r ; ed. rd ! p-ti- qo se I f I , i 1 ; ' judgment, thatlboth Senator Shebmast and the Chida&o f Trioun ; are the eneniies of the! people of. tb,e United States. Of course It Is nothing new for Senator SitkkmAx to express himself In that oway; he has been doing ' it for eighteen y:ars.j jThe first thing that - wrests attention In ihiTribline Editorial is where It says: 'When this Gojvernment began its silver legislation n 1873, it had no inten-- ? tion f of being dishonest." Unfortu- did cot silver its it begin' legisla-- ; ntely, tion In 187, but In 1873. There was no intention In 1873, on the part of the Government, to be dishonest, but there was fan Intention to be dishonest by those who maaipUlated and in disguise put through that bilL The intention was.-tviolate every contract In the United States, and make the debtors perpetual debtors; to give the interest-gathere&he iitle, In a few years, to the whole country. The Tribune? next explanation, why Germany itnd England will not remonetize silver Is not the true explanation at all. "The reason England will not remonetize silver is because with it at a discbunt as compared with gold, of 30 per cent, she can perpetually depend ' npoa gett ng cheap food from America, cheap food and cheap cotton;5 at the samfl timei, she can provide a market for all the surplus products of India, and shut out,1 thb American farmer and planter toj just that extent. So ions as she keepsj silver demonetized, and the United S,tate are foolish enough to accept thit proposition as a true one, just so loig sue can dictate the price of silver, and keep the United States in tbe leading strings which she has kept it In for the last sixteen years. ; The explanation which the Tribune makes of desire that this country shall be honest Is enough to damn both Shekmas and the Chicago Tribune. Heiwould have silver, if used as a saosmute lor money, to be so used that as much should be put in a dollar as, without recognition from the Government, will brin a dollar In the rough bullion, ignoring the fact entirely that tlie chief value of silver now, and tlways hi3 been, not as merchandise but - " J . rs - ; jSenator-SirenMAsr'- a J ts money. Look at the sophistry and the false-?'- It hood of ' this sentence; has been shown that the United States cannot lift ap all the silver in t..3 r;;. sentence happens to unat i Ituta a'.iL--e cf common sense and tr-r.l ccrauon decency. What is " the Tribune speaks t7?,"'r!-- tkit c"' li & silver country; doss tit v-- l-- h t-- r:' ; jj ; . i j - cates. lie wjlsbesi the latter to represent silver measured by! its gold value, and not ' by an arbitrary underweight, fixed Govern- -; Jnent stan Jardj whidb cannot be maintained. It ia his desire (that kbe United States should be honest thajt whn it gives a man a cer- tlCcate In exctiangejfor ten ounces of silver : bullion it should gve the holder ot that certificate ten nances of silver (bullion when lie presents it for redemption. When! this Government began "its silver j in 1873 it had no intention of legislation f .being dishonest. It was believed generally at that; time that Germany and England could be Induced to remonetize silver and that it could be lifted up to parity and the old ratio to gold be restored. ' The experi- -; ence of thirteen years baa shown that the It has been hopes of ISTs frere shown that the United States cannot single- -; banded lift qp all the silver in the world,1 and it la certain that European nations will: not remonetize it so long as they retain the bold they have on the United States by reason of their) possession of vita stocks and' bonds to the value of 'six or eight hundred millions. 'When they need cold they can end a batch f those securities over here, on Wail street, and drain this Kirutm much) of the yellow metal as country of they require. nsettllog tbe business of-t- he United States knocking down stock values, and menaclm it frith a panic While we allow that state of things to exist, why should European financiers bother with tryabove Its coming to lift silver; one-thimercial ralae.? They prefer to let the fool L. a Americans have lt This country has drifted Into dishonesty silver, and Senator Sherman that it is time to stop- it, before mischievous consequences j ensqe. Thus far there has been no complalni about the redemption of silver paper in 'short weight silver dollars, because there Is another method of redern which has beta extensively used. This and paper :is receivable for custom-houInternal revenue) duties in place of gold. : Fo long as the mass! of silver in its various forms does not exceea materially the total revenue of the Government, amounting to M90.0O0.000 yearly, it is in the power ot the Treasury Department to redeem it by ac- ceptln? it froni debtors of the Government. But l?,the quantity of silver certificates I add Treasury notes becomes so great th-t- t a considerable portion can be redeemed , only ' in short-weig- ht dollars, then complaints of the dishonesty - of; the ; Government will be heard j and gold Will quickly go ' begin to to a premium and disappear from circula-- , , v:' :; j tion. l .. Senator Sherman would have done better had be gone a step ' farther and preached honesty for the past as well as the future. The Treasury notes issued during the last year which are made redeemable in coin j should be made redeemable In sliver bullion at its gold value. The Treasury has tbe bullion to redeem them. ! The same thins t should be done with the silver certificates, The sixty million dollars of profit which the Government j has made Improperly on lis silver;, transactions eannot be better used ; than la redeeming these certificates in sil- -j ver bullion. whlch shall be tbe equivalent toj tbe commercial amount ot silver needed . toj make a sliver dollar of equal value with a gold dollar. IV iThe whole editorial reveals, in our . j. to-morr-ow . - - . jlifthtj-weigh- : in the next Congress, if the Eepublic&ns were to refuse to vote and leave the Democrats to settle the iquektlon." That Is a speech by a Eepublicaa in a great interest-gatherin- g Stitte of the: Union, and in its tryidg'to break down the argument of the Democratic candidato for Governor in Ithat State, I in which he utterly repudiated silver, and there is no particular sense In those quoted words, And Mi tile Democrat In reply were j only partially familiar with the question,! he Would retort in these wordsj:'" It lis true the Democrats wero ail.;cra?y ihj Congress to vote for a f reoj coinage bill last winter, because they Mrantedj icMpJiit the President of the Uijitcd States 'in a hole, and use the buncombe j wliicW they would have1 made, jn this yeaW campaign. But if you want to get the real status of how the Democratic party stands, go back a tittle to the record of the last Democratic administration and you will see that with an overwhelming majority in one'Housej when! the Republicans In the other Uduse passed Free Coinage bill we stamped upon itff :and our; President then stood ready, in case we passed the bill, to veto it as; cordially as ever he vetoed a soldier's pension bill. In our last National; Democratic platform we . utterly ignorqd the that'ter.! And all of that amounts to nothing. The fact remains just; as it has been, that the men bf the West generally favor silver, the me nj of the! (extreme East oppose It. The canrpaigii, of education Is going on id the Mississippi aud . Missouri valleys! and it will be all right by and by, and the triumph, will not be a Bepubiican Jriumph, or a Democratic triumph, but! it willf be'ihe result of an enlighted public opinion, backed byjnen of both, paries, which' finally prevailed and became a law. f ! s, - J Tribune pretend that France Is not sufficient to maintain silver as against Gerf many? Edssla is chiefly a sliver country; does the Tribune pretend that Eus-si- a cannot maintain silver as against Austria and Italy? And does the Trio--' une pretend that, if the United States were to accept silver and declare to the world that for It silver was an original money as good as gold, it could not now sland off Grcat.Britaln as well as It did between 1816 and 1873? Then where Is the world outside? Is it Spanish America or old Spain; is It China, is It India? One would think that a paper as big as the Chicago Tribune, even If it is prone to be dishonest, would hesitate about publishing Itself as an ass every morn- -' probably four? log. Quite three-fifthhuman the of fifths, family depend upon silver for their money. Every year the world, outside of our country, uses more' silver than It produces. And so closely is this absorbed that Senator Sheemax, the Tiibunc and every other man or ncwspaperthat just'now Is engaged In keeping the shackles on labor, cannot figure where one hundred million of dollars worth of silver, where S1.30 per capita for our people, could be obtained by raking the world over 1 1 is as clear as jthe sunlight that, were the Government of the United' States ; to declare that silver was henceforth to be to It an original, ultimate measure of values as Rood as sold, silver would be on a parity with gold . the world1 around within twenty-- f our hours; j and nothing could break it down, because in the very center of the financial world, In the center of that center in the Bank of England, which Is in fact the clearing hpuse of the universe, the governor of that Insti- -. tution declares that there i3 not gold enough in the world to serve as a basis lor the world s business. . And the ma jority of the people of Great Britain to favor of silver money. day are-iThe Tribune says truly 'that when we have so much money In Europe it is possible for those countries, at anytime. td throw our securities on the market and drain us of gold. That Is what they did last year, what they have done this year, and the result is such congestion in the money centers that there is stag nation in business over all the land; and the temporary prosperity which is being enjoyed now is not due to our free Gov ernment, is not due to any enlightened legislation, but due to the fact that the pale skeleton of famine is stalking over Europe,' and those people have to have bread. , This Senator and this newspaper talk about the discount on silver, and the need of bringing the bullion price of silver op to the coined value of gold; the need of making the silver on its merits as a commodity equal to gold, wh6n be hind gold Is the backing of the Govern ment and the recognition of the Government of it as money. 'But there is some thing else- at a discount, and it is the same discount at which silver stands; and that is the .product of labor. It cannot be explained away by the' talk of or the talk of labor- saving machinery, which .enables cer tain things to' be produced cheaper than be they formerly - were, cause the discount Is universal. Take any article in general use, any staple, whether it be wheat or corn or cotton, or leather or boots or shoes or the products of the American factories, or iron, the great barometer, the price of which gives business men an idea of the state of trade generally, aud every i une utf tuese articles is at tne same or greater f discount than silver is. And with these facts so plain, with the per petual cry of labor for Telief, with the dispatches like the one that came yes terday saying that while the population has increased in this country 25 per cent, crimes have increased 40 per cent during the last decade, and that the great in crease is In jails and In minor prisons; it is most strange that men are so hard hearted as not to read In that the fact that that Increase in crime Is due to the poverty of the 'people; and that poverty" has come, because "so far as our "country could, it struck ont of existence half the money of the world. And the bugbear or what might be, if we a Nation of 65,000,000, with a continent yet to de velop, should have the audacity to say that we would take silver as. money, is the most ridiculous of all bugbears; be cause if from the depths of India and China, if from the banking-house-s of Europe, from the private coffers of the rich men of the country the whole amount of silver were to be gathered up ana given to us, would it not amount to ?60 per capita for our people, and we need that every dollar of it. Prance uses successfully S35. France Is a ma tured country, and needs no money except-to keep the cars of commerce mov wnne we hay got the; mines to ing, the fields to subdue, thef cities to open, build, the factories to. establish, the States to create.. Of all the mysteries in the world, the mystery of how these gold lords in the East and their attorneys and advisers have thus far been able to so hoodwink tho'American people that there has not been .one "universal demand that the wrong of 1873 shall be wiped out, is' the greatest. Still we believe it Is all right; Ve believe that before the 4th of March next the business will be" settled, and the crime finally wiped off the Nation's statute books, 1 . - over-producti- on v . : ! TEE TSIEifDS OP ' ILV. A contemporary beginS an Aditnrtii m with these words: "It is amusinV note the squirming of our" friends on the free coinage Republican OllOit ton Asa rule, the Democrats like to be classed on the side of free coinage. Who are these Democrats? 'Are they Mr. ' MrHux, Cleveiaxd, Governor Camtbell, or. any other prominent Eastern Democrat? Is it the Demo-cratic press of the East: -la it- 0,0 r ut., j - . lit tt-t- ; 1 or the Times or the Evening Post of Ne w York; Is It the UccorQ, of rblladelphia; the Globe of Boston; is It the Herald of Chicago; Is It any of the prominent Democratic papers. North or South, with a single exception? This contemporary quotes from Senator Hoab as follows: "The test of the attitude of the two parties oa the silver question will bo, to think' for a moment what would have happened in the last Cci-recr what would have bajriDeneA, ss, UTJlH, EBIBAT'iHOB12TG, OCTOBEB ra ; ' , TBS TEUTU ABOUT 7X27 Pi ATE. The Eothschilds estimate that France will this year have to pay to the United States about forty millions of dollars in gold for wheat. France Is a country about the size of California. It contains about half as many people as the United States. These people are the most pros although they live on perous that small territory and have to pay millions and millions, of dollars annually for the food they buy in foreign lands. They are able to do this and at the same time support an army of 800,000 men al ways in garrison, always fully equipped. They have, moreover, to keep In readi ness for instant use the second largest navv In the world. It seems to us a study of that nation and its work ought to close the mouths of every man In the United States who Is doing what he can to directly or indirectly discourage the ' building of manufactories. A thousand' years ago France had a centuries In adKing who was several ' vance of his age. lie established art schools and encouraged the building up of crude and. simple manufactories. Had there been a free trade press in France at that time it would have probably de nounced the Sovereign, and charged him with taking the money "wrung by rob ber taxes" irom the poor to build up an aristocratic few, and they probably would have added that the old King was in on the steal.. But it went on; the church helped by building magnificent cathedrals aud decorating them, training the eyes of the people to understand the difference between real art and the bogus article. And that work has been progressing ever "since through all the ebb and flow of thirty generations. And the result is that France Is a nation of artists, and her manufactured goods, placed side by side with those of any other nation, command higher prices as a rule than any other.- So she finds work for her people, and they buy and absorb not only all the products of the soil, but there have to bo millions and millions of dollars worth of food imported' annually, and yet such a command have the artisans of France of the trade of the world that the nation is continually "prosperous. Through that work, too, It has borne without flinching some of the mightiest burdens and some of the most awful re verses that were ever put upon a nation. A million of her people died in the Na poleon wars. Twenty years ago Prussia exacted a ransom so great that in the shrewd mind of Bismarck the thought was fixed that it would prostrate France for fifty years to come, and yet the people went down Into their stockings and paid the' indemnity and in threa years, except in the bitterness which found vent among the people at the mention of their great enemy, no one would have dreamed that the country had been swept by a hostile army, aud the capital captured in an exhaustive 1 war only three years before. . Our country has within it the re sources, it possesses the area, it has the energy to make many lands like France; all it needs is that the people shall fcbe educated up to that point where they will do as good work jis the. French When they arrive afcr. that point, and when they obtain money enough to de velop the resources that yet remain un developed, then we shall be like France, except tnat ior many ana many a year yet our soil will be able to support our people, and when it becomes a little more difficult to obtain, then the tide will turn strongly to the South, and more lands will be appropriated by peaceable conquests. It seems to us that this is exactly the time when the cry of every statesman and of every newspaper ought to be: "Board all the gold and silver from the mines, extend the art schools, encourage the manufactures, and in fifty years we will make every other nation, by con - A contemporary proceeds with some very remarkable declarations ander the above heading. It speaks of the tin mines of California ?indj South Dakota; says they ajre nptl yielding much, and 'it is these mines that gave the impetus in which the tin plateihariff was raised to 2.2 cents per pound by the McKinley '? jj; bill." That Is a tvery Extraordinary statement to put but under jtho title of truth. The tariff ws put on tin plate, because tin plate iscpmposqd of about tin and three-fourtSteel, and the idea was that it was a ridiculous proposition to pay to great Britain quite $15,030,000 per year forlsomething of which wo produced more than any other country in the world. ' This contemporary tries to deceive people by a' bold sentence of this kind: Andjyet th owners of the mines wanted a stiff protective duty on the imported pig tin befoH they are willing to embark in the business." There is no tariff on pig tin; the tariff Is on and i the; men who owned these mi nes' did not propose to engage in the builnljiS at: all simply In the product of f rajwj tinJ The sentence woul4 have jus a;s much sense if silver were ito be substituted for tin, and read like tlis: Atl Jrejt the owners of the mines wanted a stiff protective duty on imported silver bullion before they r were willing to embark! In the jewelry business." j j ;:t Our contemporary quotes from Congressman-elect Bustixg the statement that "the Canning Industry now consumes more than half of the tin plate imported, jand ttis: jpays 58,000,000 yearly, because it Was a mark for the disastrous liscrlmjutUion.? It is about four months since the McKinley bill began to apply to tfri plate; even now tin pans arb selling 3 ;per cent cheaper than they ever did; tinder the old law, and it is expected ithat by this time next year all kinds of material; manufactured from tin plate will ,b selling cheaper than it was a year ago. The effect of the tariff oh any 'industry is to tempo- trast, second-classicbst slightly. The rarily Increase ADMISSION OF, STATES. same very pgumehthtbat is used here r i by this BjjxTKfoJwas used with just as yur contemporary says: much effect on sterol rails when the tariff "There morning is just one way that Arizona can was laid on5 them.i secure admission, and that is by giving fs that In this counassurance that her first two Senators JThe, funny-thintry there can be a class:of people who will be Republicans, and her first elec every day jn the year wlll keep the air toral votes will bo cast for the Republi ringing with lamqnfcions because there can candidate." has been a sensible effort on the part of Are those the terms on which certain the Government to make possible the gentlemen expect to obtain Statehood building op of iart industry In which for Utah, this coming winter? Hava nothing bat cheap initerial is used, In the two Senators been promised to the which only ordinary j skill j Is required, Democrats, and the three electoral and which: up to date; has been costing votes to the Republicans? this countfy in gpldj or its equivalent, three electoral votes been ' Or have the promised to 823,000,OOd per annuj. It seems to abthe Democrats and the two Senators to solutely break their; hearts that that the Republicans? Or have both the Re mu;h money should jtto taken away from publicans and the Democrats been prom certain . manuf act;ureis across the water ised not only the Senators but elec the and given jto ceftainj manufacturers on toral votes if Statehood should obbe this side of the, watbj. It is tained? .r It is only curiosity that Calhounisin gbne stark mad. If these questions, but it seems the same sjplrit had; jijro vailed since the prompts queer that our morning contemporary, beginnlcgiof the Gdvernment, bur coun which is usually not very bright, try would jhave beebll land of farmers dropped on exactly what will be needed and we would have bf en tied hand and by our friends In Arizona In order to foot to actulfers beyond the sea. obtain Statehood. Further, our contemWhethejr there Is tin enough in .Cali- porary is willing to promise the gentlefornia anjd in l)akdtato supply the men In Arizona Statehood just so soon needs of the codntry, no,one as yet as a Democratic President can be knows. 4-- It is, fthts miners who own elected. He will not keep a Territhese mines dare hoi borrow the monev In leading strings; "he tory will to open their mines thoroughly to uro- - be to near draw glad to him the uuce lin in large quantUfes for fear that of the Territory, in order that people by a twist In politics next year, a Demo they may take their part in the duties cratic President ?an4 Congress will be of Still it was little troublecitizenship. elected, wiilch will throw the tariff all some under the last Democratic Adminoff from tn plato; in which event they istration to get Statehood for either wouia lose not ouiy; their mines, but bo of There seemed lei&inaeoi oesiics. ihey say that y an objoction hlch could not be toover-be any assurance couiq Do had that the come, to the admission of the Dakotas. tariff on tin plate; would be held for ten Of course; the feeling of the Admiais years, that they would go to work to tratlon- WasMust as kindly toward supply the market with all needed tin. Dakota as i.tossibly wiir be in case of Whether this is true or net, we do not another Democratic President's eleckaow. : But, to sayf that the tariff was toward the people of Arizona. tion, put on tiny plate to protect the tin mine And if It should' develop that a large owners of this coiuntry, would be baby majority of the men of Arizona hacDen . . . oil.-iiu via nut po wicKcdly false. to bo Republicans, it might happen to And to judge of what the price of tin that the incoming Adminls- transpire will be sojsoon as:ouri manufacturers get tration. would set its face Lard against in a condition to iaake tin plate, is simvuu iiuiuissjun 01 any mor rotten ply 'seeking to unjustly prejudice a peo- boroughs." The of growl newsthe ple, aud with a purpose pf making im- paper because au Administration backed possible an industry in this by a Congress of its own political faith, which would give employment country to tens will of thousands of .people, , and make to bonot hurry to give a Territory known opposed politically to the Admin them consumers of the product of the istration, Statehood, Is one of 'tip silliest farmers, who are being told now that that ever a paper engage! In. - It things this whoU effort is a gigantic spoeula-tlois exactly on the same plane as it would Intended for nothing except to rob bo to denounce a President for appoint, him. , a. ing Cabinet around him composed of . ; - j hls own political friends, and not giv ing any appointments to his political enemies. 1 The nomination of Llr. Ixoweb is a wet blanket to the mugwumps. Of Mr. Clevxiaxd's recent speech the New York Evening Fostsays: Ey ti cry of some cf tie eaallcr f-youbslieve thsj are "cnttiax prici s." tia.g quality. T7ensver claira to e; I1 c" ' The appearance of Governor mil and Mr, Cleveland on tbe same platform last night was a curious phenomenon. Mr. Cleveland is, wherever be appears, an Imposing per sonage, and always says weighty things. His speech last night was by no means en thusiastic but It was cool and dexterous. He had a eood word for all classes of his supporters. He bad little to say though what be said was high praise about the Democratic condidate for tbe Governorship; but be dwelt on tbe Importance of this election with regard to national Issues, and threw this into the form of warning to the Independents who are afraid ot Tammany. Dut on this point the Independents are not by his argu likely to be much influenced ments, because tbey were used in lts87 to in duce us to make Fellows District Attorney, Grant to and in 1883 to induce us to the Mayoralty. They are a kind of advice which the titular head ol a great party is obliged to give, ex officio, as it were, but they are to be received as tne raitniui receive a mdIous oolnion" in the Catholic Church that is, as obligatory for any one who likes for any one who it. but as does not. From' all of which we conclude that the, mugwumps generally aro determined to knife Mr. FliOWEb this fall and sup port Mr. Cleveland next summer. ' re-ele- ct hs tin-pla- te tin-plat- e, tin-pja- te or co unci: tou zrzzc X,A T0T7IT. j , - , i j , " jj OIJiT EAST u Ail nousi: ut Each day we are in receipt of tLs newest ideas from Eastern Vuraiiavi Factories. Each, day bring-- na new patteraa from the carpet factories ahl each day we are in receipt of tlie newest conveniences and virtues in cookiuV , j and heating;, stoves. s , THE FREED FURNITliRE AND CARPET CO,, (HAXSIjrS i I3UILDI n ESTATE o annex thinks it Is to real naughty compare the condition of the dead at Thermopylae to Vie laid-oof the recent political conflict here. It was a little hard on .the immortal 300, to be sure, but The Tribune only carried said, what the tithing-hods- e to its legitimate conclusion. As to the tithlng-hous- e check, It intimates that it received the other half also, which we believe, but only half from the tithlng-house proper; the other half was prob ably received from another .Mormon source; but whether being a pensioner on Mormon relief Is a credit to it or not, the Times must, of course, judge for itself. STREET r X ; ut pap-suck- I er I ;:."-- ". EM ; .. BACKWAR . Over your experience with Clothing", havan't you generally found that r. cheap goo Is were the dearest and most unsatisfactory pur- I" chase you could make? Isn't it true that poorly made and Clothes, which get quickly out of shape, are not cheap at any figure? so-call- : ed ill-fitti- "'U: ;:.:r'- i ' .V l ' , ng ". .) ; HIS OCCURRED IT New No. 5 TD-rU- S I That the change in the temperature in the past few days may have kSiade it ocour tpyou that a few words about Overcoats won't be amiss. i. . - i: we.wuuiuu axju vrr o v m. .'L. Of ji. -o ,v- imtd uavg jim.itjr yua see. X ACy are XUU coats that" gentlemen may well be style, warmth and elegance, and Standard Reminflton ! iu. ww TYPEWRITER. 1 . - j.- proud to wear solid, serviceable and genteel. ' 1 allsrn- - Unexcelled tor speed, durability, perfect mem ana eae 01 manipulation. s if machines lor rtsnt. Full stock of typewriter supplies. lrst-oJas- , F. E McGUKRIN, 403 Prognress Buildinsr. t PIANOS JgmT9 LEADERS OF; FASHION. LEADERS OF FASHION. Steinway and (Mckering A It ; i; : j-- . I . . -.- r I ' h " THE TWO GREAT LEADERS. WORLD-EENOWNE- D E. ABPEN MERCANTILE . OP. LONDON, I CO.. .... , Guardian Assurance Companjr, AM PIA2TOS rpjIESE A sold only by ' f 1 v In all ot Utah, Idaho and Wyoming. ESTABLISHED A. D. 1821. W e are .also sole acenta for Kaabe A- Co. PAID Deoker Bros., A. B. Chase, J. A C. Fischer, Ev IIP 5,000,000 a ctj! A 00 iiii.e erett, and Bnoitn A liarns Pianos; Story & Clark. A. B. Chase, Loring A Blalte and BridgeINVESTED IN TJ. S. BONDS 1,016,000 port Orgnas. We carrv a larsre and comnlete as sortment of the above named instruments always on baud, any of which we will sell on time mr. menu if desired. Mo trouble to show instru ments wnetner you do or do mot bnv. Correspondence promptly attended to. PrWa SALT LAKE CITY ' BRANCH: and terms quoted on- - application. Old instru ments taken in exenange. jv carry She largest Steele of instrument and seH-lower prices. tSc man any nouse west ot Chicago. VIaLnag:erst Mores located as follows: Salt Lake Cut. 73 u. oecona ooutn; ueaen.Kfts wasnington, Avati 149 S. JSAST iTEJIPLE ST. Boise City; Idaho; Cheyenne. Wyoming. (Rear Bank off the RepntUe.) - capital;.....'...., .........$ W' E. iSMEDLEY & CO. 1 SUN FIRE OFFICE 3 si OF LONDON. - te Instituted a m D. 17IO. . IKSURASCE OFFICE IN THE WOULD. ft CASH ASSijTS, JAN. 1890,.; CASH ASSETS IN AMERICA,.. . .. ,L. v. . . . . . $9 03 biO 1 $1,656:331 FOREIGN GOODS ONZT fe!e j Our Brown Scotch Suitings are the Correct Thing Tor Stylish Dressers. ; Our tit and finish: are perfect. -- Qto lorks, 42i and , & CO., j Merchant Tailors. 2G West Seconi Souti--Str3-ot, site Cullen HoteL acliineii., Foundry and K WaLIACE j r - J West 1st South st City 0cs, 11 West Second Soitb ' Strei ' MANUFACTURERS OF Pining fMacliinery, Concentrating Hills, Quartz oppo Hills, Smelting Farnaces, Ore Cars, 'fi: i ed j S.D.EVANS ' (Successor I, " ; Car Whc2l3, Slug Tots ; , j i I 1 i ! EMBALMER, t ; 214 STATE ST.;- - - I ; And All Kinds of lliniriff and Beduction Machinerv. Builders Iron Vork, Steel Beams. Bepairs on Machinery. ripe Cuttingr and Everything Apertainine o Our Bins Promptly? Execnted. to Evans A Boss), f ; FIRE OLDEST PURELY g the-manu- J .' ." . uJ i VljsileMl4 The tithing-hous- . ; 7 non-obllxat- - jj ere continually trying to rial a1 prices invariably raeari cuH "chares lower than anybody in tovraJ st terms than any establishrxe? i 3 --- iaCalt Late City. - one-four- th 1891. 1G, S.Ii. SALT LAKE CITY. Speplat attention given to the shlpiaent of bodies. Open all night Telephone 284. ' " V ON DRAUGHT. Uoute1 tlie'-Dakqta- SaSf ISSSM&. ChDenhelte r j CUXI b"ement' CommtrcW . . - 1 ; , i fYPmjT: &LUB B1BBON? . .5 -- .... hi. , .j;- 1 - QUART BOTTjK. CHART B. K. Bl,OCn & CO., Sole AfjentJj 13, 15, 17 aud 10, COJlMliRClAIi STItkET. DEML COJIPM. EXPERT Sots of Teeth. " T" . Teeth. Filled. Teeth Extracted Teeth Cleaned - .. $5.00 .50 .25 BROWNING BROS l.OO Teetfl Extracted Atsolotelj Without Tda.i IX CEMliAL BLOCK. o. 40 W. Second South St Acro the street .. "l-FIC- from Wonderland. paine; lyne, agents for cooper's ; n, .. Freh and fine, over th i h&r and at th. ..Uxa ; ......... CESTS PER ....85 "' v.. 60 CESTS PER . sHteEPDip; . . 1LI AMP HAZARD POWDER. State Street . SALT LAKE CITY 155 Main St., Salt Lake City! . 2461 Washington Ay., Ogderi. , Bicycles Oqbs, FisMtig Tackle, Lawn Ten-I2ae Bill and Cricket Gooia. aftts- - W limit rjn,M TTamml.- - ' rleld Glneej Boots, Shoen. eta. We cent lower tntj leu tiizjr tUa trade. none eie n per Agenta jor tt "Incrleu Earebler.'v tha LiThost Salety l.icd f Tricyclsj . - V - itltln ISt, Da Pont' Sportlnsr and Powder. Eife.y Mtro and AtUl wta. Powder. : Giant Capa, v, etc. . ) rri asi Bead toxne. for tiiwutrsl'ji tm d Z'ree ct-lis- i J rjJLf' 1 |